Phenology, Habitat Use, and the Impacts of Wetland Management on Autumn Migrating Rails in Missouri

<p> Rails (Family: Rallidae) are among the least studied birds in North America, in large part due to their elusive nature. As a wetland-dependent species, understanding the timing of their migration and their habitat needs during migration is especially important since management needs to be...

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Main Author: Fournier, Auriel Maria VanDerLaar
Language:EN
Published: University of Arkansas 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10261753
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-102617532017-03-24T05:03:34Z Phenology, Habitat Use, and the Impacts of Wetland Management on Autumn Migrating Rails in Missouri Fournier, Auriel Maria VanDerLaar Wildlife conservation|Wildlife management|Ecology <p> Rails (Family: Rallidae) are among the least studied birds in North America, in large part due to their elusive nature. As a wetland-dependent species, understanding the timing of their migration and their habitat needs during migration is especially important since management needs to be timed to balance the needs of many species. I developed and verified a new distance sampling based nocturnal ATV spotlight survey because traditional call-broadcast surveys are not effective during autumn migration because of the drop off in call rate after the breeding season. These surveys allow us to ask point-level questions about what habitats rails select during migration and how it changes over time. Through these standardized surveys from 2012-2016 across 11 public properties in Missouri, USA, I documented the migratory timing and habitat use of migratory rails. Sora (Porzana carolina) have a wide migratory window, beginning in early August and continuing through the end of October with a peak in late September. Virginia Rail (Rallus limicola) and Yellow Rails (Coturnicops noveboracensis) have shorter migratory periods, from late September through the end of October. Rails, especially Sora, migrate earlier than waterfowl, which can create a mismatch of habitat needs. We performed a 3 year experiment to examine the response of Sora and waterfowl to early autumn wetland flooding. Sora responded positively without a negative impact on waterfowl. I used monitoring data to create species distribution models to inform estimates of migratory connectivity for all three species using stable hydrogen isotopes. Sora and Yellow Rails were estimated to migrate generally north-south, with Virginia Rails coming from a wider east-west range. Through better understanding the migratory connectivity, timing and habitat use of rails in the autumn I provide a foundation to inform conservation and management of these fascinating and elusive birds. We provide a description of all variables used (Appendix II), GPS data of survey tracks and detection points (Appendix III), data sets of bird observation points, survey data, and vegetation information (Appendix IV), data sets of stable hydrogen isotope data (Appendix V), data sets of species distribution models (Appendix VI).</p> University of Arkansas 2017-03-23 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10261753 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Wildlife conservation|Wildlife management|Ecology
spellingShingle Wildlife conservation|Wildlife management|Ecology
Fournier, Auriel Maria VanDerLaar
Phenology, Habitat Use, and the Impacts of Wetland Management on Autumn Migrating Rails in Missouri
description <p> Rails (Family: Rallidae) are among the least studied birds in North America, in large part due to their elusive nature. As a wetland-dependent species, understanding the timing of their migration and their habitat needs during migration is especially important since management needs to be timed to balance the needs of many species. I developed and verified a new distance sampling based nocturnal ATV spotlight survey because traditional call-broadcast surveys are not effective during autumn migration because of the drop off in call rate after the breeding season. These surveys allow us to ask point-level questions about what habitats rails select during migration and how it changes over time. Through these standardized surveys from 2012-2016 across 11 public properties in Missouri, USA, I documented the migratory timing and habitat use of migratory rails. Sora (Porzana carolina) have a wide migratory window, beginning in early August and continuing through the end of October with a peak in late September. Virginia Rail (Rallus limicola) and Yellow Rails (Coturnicops noveboracensis) have shorter migratory periods, from late September through the end of October. Rails, especially Sora, migrate earlier than waterfowl, which can create a mismatch of habitat needs. We performed a 3 year experiment to examine the response of Sora and waterfowl to early autumn wetland flooding. Sora responded positively without a negative impact on waterfowl. I used monitoring data to create species distribution models to inform estimates of migratory connectivity for all three species using stable hydrogen isotopes. Sora and Yellow Rails were estimated to migrate generally north-south, with Virginia Rails coming from a wider east-west range. Through better understanding the migratory connectivity, timing and habitat use of rails in the autumn I provide a foundation to inform conservation and management of these fascinating and elusive birds. We provide a description of all variables used (Appendix II), GPS data of survey tracks and detection points (Appendix III), data sets of bird observation points, survey data, and vegetation information (Appendix IV), data sets of stable hydrogen isotope data (Appendix V), data sets of species distribution models (Appendix VI).</p>
author Fournier, Auriel Maria VanDerLaar
author_facet Fournier, Auriel Maria VanDerLaar
author_sort Fournier, Auriel Maria VanDerLaar
title Phenology, Habitat Use, and the Impacts of Wetland Management on Autumn Migrating Rails in Missouri
title_short Phenology, Habitat Use, and the Impacts of Wetland Management on Autumn Migrating Rails in Missouri
title_full Phenology, Habitat Use, and the Impacts of Wetland Management on Autumn Migrating Rails in Missouri
title_fullStr Phenology, Habitat Use, and the Impacts of Wetland Management on Autumn Migrating Rails in Missouri
title_full_unstemmed Phenology, Habitat Use, and the Impacts of Wetland Management on Autumn Migrating Rails in Missouri
title_sort phenology, habitat use, and the impacts of wetland management on autumn migrating rails in missouri
publisher University of Arkansas
publishDate 2017
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10261753
work_keys_str_mv AT fournieraurielmariavanderlaar phenologyhabitatuseandtheimpactsofwetlandmanagementonautumnmigratingrailsinmissouri
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